| Literature DB >> 33086537 |
Megan R Winkler1, Shannon N Zenk2, Barbara Baquero3, Elizabeth Anderson Steeves4, Sheila E Fleischhacker5, Joel Gittelsohn6, Lucia A Leone7, Elizabeth F Racine8.
Abstract
The retail food environment (RFE) has important implications for dietary intake and health, and dramatic changes in RFEs have been observed over the past few decades and years. Prior conceptual models of the RFE and its relationships with health and behavior have played an important role in guiding research; yet, the convergence of RFE changes and scientific advances in the field suggest the time is ripe to revisit this conceptualization. In this paper, we propose the Retail Food Environment and Customer Interaction Model to convey the evolving variety of factors and relationships that convene to influence food choice at the point of purchase. The model details specific components of the RFE, including business approaches, actors, sources, and the customer retail experience; describes individual, interpersonal, and household characteristics that affect customer purchasing; highlights the macro-level contexts (e.g., communities and nations) in which the RFE and customers behave; and addresses the wide-ranging outcomes produced by RFEs and customers, including: population health, food security, food justice, environmental sustainability, and business sustainability. We believe the proposed conceptualization helps to (1) provide broad implications for future research and (2) further highlight the need for transdisciplinary collaborations to ultimately improve a range of critical population outcomes.Entities:
Keywords: dietary intake; environment; food purchasing behavior; grocery store; restaurant; retail
Mesh:
Year: 2020 PMID: 33086537 PMCID: PMC7589434 DOI: 10.3390/ijerph17207591
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Int J Environ Res Public Health ISSN: 1660-4601 Impact factor: 3.390
Figure 1Retail Food Environment and Customer Interaction Model. The retail food environment consists of retail sources, retail actors, and business models that influence the customer retail experience. Customers involve individual, interpersonal, and household characteristics that affect customer purchasing and thus the retail sales of foods and beverages. Both the retail food environment and customers and their households are embedded in macro-level contexts (e.g., communities and nations), and as a result of the interactions and dynamics among these multiple model components, a host of population outcomes are produced: health, food security, food justice, environmental sustainability, and business sustainability. Definitions for model components are provided in Table 1.
Definitions for key model components.
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| Sources | • The settings (e.g., stores, restaurants, online websites/apps) where people can purchase and obtain food/beverage products |
| Actors | • The people who interact, make decisions, and behave in various ways that create and support the current food environment, such as: store managers, owners, distributors, wholesalers, and sales representatives |
| Business Models | • The business design (e.g., targeted customer base, product/service selection), practices, goals, and ownership types (e.g., independent, publicly-traded, franchise) that characterize retail food businesses |
| Customer Retail Experience | • The features (e.g., price, availability) that customers encounter when they obtain and purchase food/beverage products |
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| Individual Dietary Intake | • The specific foods and beverages consumed |
| Individual Characteristics | • Factors at an intrapersonal level that contribute and influence individual dietary intake and/or purchasing behavior |
| Interpersonal and Household Characteristics | • Factors at the interpersonal and household levels that contribute to an individual’s behavior and characteristics |
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| • The point of a transaction where a product is sold by the retailer and equivalently purchased by the customer |
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| • Macro-level factors from neighborhoods and city/local jurisdictions that influence the retail food environment, customers, and their relationships. |
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| • Macro-level factors from state, tribal, national, and global contexts that can influence the community context, retail food environment, customers, and their relationships. |
Figure 2Common and Emerging Retail Food Sources across Two Dimensions of Customer Convenience: Accessibility and Degree of Required Preparation. Accessibility involves the ability for customers to obtain food products from a retail source from their immediate location (e.g., food can be delivered to their location or customers are required to travel to source). Degree of required preparation captures the typical proportion of products offered by the source that is prepared: ready-to-eat versus unprepared.
Examples of individual, interpersonal, and household characteristics relevant to food and beverage purchasing and dietary intake behavior.
| Domain | Individual Characteristics | Interpersonal and Household Characteristics |
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Eating behaviors Food cooking skills and behaviors Taste/food preference/meal selection Cognitions (attitudes, knowledge, preferences) Time availability and pressure Perceived stress and physiologic stress responses Lifestyle/other health behaviors Weight status Eating disorders and chronic health conditions Biological (age, genes) Demographics (education, race/ethnicity, employment) Immigration status Cultural values Prior experiences/memories with food |
Household membership Food preparation equipment, tools, and space Household member with food preparation skills Work schedules Transportation US Department of Agriculture Supplemental Nutrition Assistance Program (SNAP) status Time of month (food benefit cycle) Household preferences for food/drinks available Social influences (role modeling, support, norms) Food purchase frequency Time of the day Access to and placement of foods in the home Food choice incentives Rules and norms about eating (family eats together) |
Macro-level contexts with example factors that influence the retail food environment; customer purchasing, dietary intake, and individual and household characteristics; and their relationships.
| Retail Food Environment | Customer: Diets and Individual and Household Characteristics | Community Context | |
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Licensing fees Taxes (e.g., sweetened beverage taxes) Local subsidies Income level and purchasing power Cost of living Local ordinances (e.g., default beverage in restaurant child meals, staple foods) Food industry contracts with schools, hospitals, and other institutions Zoning codes |
Economic development Employment opportunities Safety Retailer-community relations Social and cultural norms Stressors (e.g., disorder, violence) Educational system Transportation systems Walkability Public health campaigns Food industry sponsorship of community activities (e.g., child sports/summer camps) | |
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Food assistance programs–retailer requirements (e.g., SNAP, WIC) Banking and lending practices Societal values and ideologies Broadband internet infrastructure School, daycare, worksite policies Regional planning Food safety standards Food labeling laws Food production Product development Food processing/manufacturing Marketing (e.g., trade promotion fees) Agriculture policies and subsidies International trade agreements |
Federal nutrition assistance programs–benefits and food packages (e.g., SNAP, WIC) Minimum wage laws Regulations for media advertising to children Advertising (e.g., commercials, social media, sponsorships) |
Funding for education Transportation funding Preemption laws |
Note. SNAP, US Department of Agriculture Supplemental Nutrition Assistance Program; WIC, US Department of Agriculture Special Supplemental Nutrition Program for Women, Infants, and Children.